Word: written
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...more articles take up an identical phase of a problem in a similar manner, however, the CRIMSON feels justified in only printing the best one of them. All articles should be signed by the writer's real name. The CRIMSON also feels at liberty to suppress armless, hopelessly written, trivial articles on any subject. Any contributor whose article is not published may learn the reason by inquiring at the CRIMSON office...
...poem or a story for the Illustrated." Does he not still give scope to his feelings in the college literary magazines? Let us only hope that nowadays the undergraduate public does not read his effusions, excellent as they may be. The college literary magazine is made to be written, not read; the healthiest sign of collegiate life nowadays is the widening of interests to include the maturer world...
...await the final approval of the University Faculty, for another geological excursion to the mountains of Colorado. These plans would make it possible for students to take a five weeks' course, for which one-half credit will be given, or to remain eight weeks, and, on submitting a satisfactory written report on the field work, secure one full course credit...
...library has two copies of the most valuable and important book ever written on fishing, the first edition of Izaak Walton's "The Compleat Angler." Copies of this first edition, which at the time of publication sold for 18 pence were worth $60 in 1847 and in 1889 their value has risen to $225. The high-wate mark was reached in 1907, however, when one of these first editions sold for $6,450. The library also contains a Flemish work published in 1492, which is the earliest known treatise on fishing. the original manuscript of the English translation, together with...
...together a representative and authoritative assembly of documents that may some day be historically valuable in determining the causes and course of the war. The literature so far collected may be divided roughly into three groups: first, the official publications of the various belligerents; second, accounts of the war written from a non-partisan standpoint; and third, the great mass of distinctly prejudiced literature, ranging from the numerous foreign newspapers down to the frakly propagandist book and pamphlets...